‘I don’t really want to record on my own. I would love to be in a room with some people, and hear the music come alive’

 

Bernard Butler – photograph by Bella Keery

 

In 2022, I spoke to singer-songwriter, guitarist, producer and former Suede member, Bernard Butler, for a hi-fi magazine article on the re-recording and reissue of his 1998 debut album, People Move On, which included new vocals and extra guitar parts.

He told me he’d been going into a London rehearsal room for 18 months with an electric guitar and a microphone, revisiting some of his old songs, and then writing some new ones, with the intention of finally putting out a long-awaited follow up to his last solo album – 1999’s Friends and Lovers.

So, that record, Good Grief, came out this year and it’s my favourite album of 2024 – a very personal, intimate, honest and reflective collection of songs, which, lyrically, tackled subjects including his religious upbringing and Catholic guilt, his teenage years when he was dreaming of a life in music, anxiety, the companionship of solitude, and, how as a young man, he was often shamed for showing his emotions.

Butler, who has worked with acts including Duffy, Pet Shop Boys, Sharleen Spiteri, The Libertines, Tricky, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Ben Watt, Sam Lee and Jessie Buckley, produced the album, and played a lot of the instruments: guitars, drums, bass, piano and violin.

‘Good Grief is my favourite album of 2024 – a personal, intimate, honest and reflective collection of songs’

He was joined by a small amount of guest musicians, including long-time associate Sally Herbert on violin, who arranged the strings, cellist Ian Burdge, and violinist Jo O’Keefe.

First single, the cinematic mini-epic Camber Sands, with mariachi horns, piano and violin, was a soundtrack to jumping in your car and escaping from London to be beside the sea: ‘We’ll get away from this town where the pavement’s stained – it’s the backstreet of your heart that’s clogging up your veins…’

Deep Emotions had a gorgeous, folky, Bert Jansch-like acoustic guitar intro – Butler was a friend of Jansch’s and collaborated with him – but then slipped into rock-soul territory, with a big chorus, finger clicks, soaring strings and a superb, liquid, ‘70s-sounding electric guitar solo.

There was more lush orchestration on the wintry and moody London Snow, which was partly inspired by the city of London becoming a ghost town during Covid, and The Forty Foot had some wonderful, spiralling acoustic guitar patterns and startling electric playing.

Not all of the songs on Good Grief  were new –  Clean, a sparse, bluesy ballad that was written with Edwyn Collins, first appeared as a B-side in 2001, but Butler re-recorded it for the album.

Final song, The Wind, was a beautiful, stripped-back, country-tinged track, with opening lines penned by singer and actress, Jessie Buckley, with whom Butler made the 2022, Mercury Prize-nominated album, For All Our Days That Tear The Heart.

I spoke to Butler in late 2024, a few days after he’d played a superb show in London’s Lafayette, to tell him I’d made Good Grief my album of the year, and I also found out about life on the road as a solo artist, asked him to choose his favourite album from this year, and got the lowdown on his next record, a collaboration with Scottish singer-songwriters Norman Blake (Teenage Fanclub) and James Grant (Love and Money), which is released in March 2025, under the name Butler, Blake and Grant.

Q&A

Good Grief  is my favourite album of 2024. It’s the record I kept going back to most this year.

Bernard Butler: Thank you.

When I interviewed you earlier this year, for the website Superdeluxeedition, the album was just about to come out. Were you pleased with the reaction to it? It was your first solo record in 25 years…

Bernard Butler: I’ve probably taken for granted the way that it’s gone because I’ve been so busy this year. When I last spoke to you, it wasn’t so much how the record would be received, but [more] how I would be received for doing it.

I wasn’t worried about the songs, but whether people wanted me to do something or would accept me doing it – particularly as I was making a solo record for the first time in a long time and performing.

Roll the clock forward and the past six months have been a bit of a blur… I think I’ve done 61 shows this year. I felt that by the time I got to London the other night [November 2, Lafayette], I was flying and it was very natural. I don’t doubt myself – I’m not insecure, and I feel like I’m in a place where people are there because they want to be there… Probably the best way of looking at it is that I’m keener to get on with the next one now and make a mark in the road rather than just make a start.

You’ve toured all over the UK and in Europe this year. How was it?

Bernard Butler: It was gruelling because I do everything on my own – I drive myself to the shows and I do the setting up and the packing down, and I meet everyone afterwards, and do the merch. You find yourself driving off to find a hotel at midnight, parking and then checking in… I’m that weird person… ‘You’re checking in now?’ ‘Yes – I’m checking in now and I don’t need to know the hotel facilities, apart from the wi-fi…’

Bernard Butler at Lafayette, London, Nov 2, 2024 – picture by Sean Hannam

‘Being po-faced and over-earnest isn’t me, so if I was on stage trying to be a serious artist and enigmatic, it wouldn’t be natural’

I’ve been up and down the M1 a million times – that’s the overriding feeling. It’s tiring, but, at the same time, I feel like musically it’s made me better – more fluent and confident with what I’m doing. As a musician, you want to be in a position where you’re always learning – the more you do something, the more you learn. When you get to show 20 or whatever, you feel like you’re in a free space…

I like your in-between songs patter… You make me laugh. Do you think a lot of people expect you to be a lot more po-faced, or over-earnest on stage?

Bernard Butler: Yeah – I’m aware of that… Down the years, you get to know what people think of you, vaguely, and so you get to a point where you can get to address that a little bit… I don’t have to try and address it, as I’m just being myself. Being po-faced and over-earnest isn’t me, so if I was on stage trying to be a serious artist and enigmatic, it wouldn’t be natural.

I think there’s enough emotional and drawn-out drama in my music to cover me when I’m playing the songs. In-between the songs, it’s a nice contrast, and I like talking to people and disarming them… I don’t like silence, like when I have to play churches and everyone’s super-quiet and reverent – it’s a bit restrictive.

Most of the time it’s just me on stage… I don’t have a band, so I’ve got no one to turn around and talk to… I come off stage and go into the dressing room… I can’t say, ‘Hey, guys – how was that?’, as there’s no one there… So, in a way, when I talk to people from the stage, it’s just a bit of a conversation for me and I make a bit of a joke, or tell a few stories about the songs – I think people like that kind of stuff.

Photograph by Bella Keery

 

I’m very aware – there’s no secret about this – of the perception of me from where I came from… Suede, basically, and that situation, and everything that was written about me around that time, and is still written about me in the shadow of that narrative… It’s a narrative that I have no control over – it’s written in stone, and I cannot say anything about it… It’s a very difficult situation for me in one sense, but, on the other side, I just think, ‘OK – I have a little space every night where I can address that in my own way…’ Not by going on about that situation, but by saying, ‘Hey you lot – you probably think of me as this person, but I’m just going to give you exactly who I am…’

So, if people go away thinking, ‘I thought he was going to be this shy, cynical arsehole, who’s wrapped up in himself, because I’ve read that, but I’ve actually had a fun night…’ It’s the only space I’ve got available to do that…

When I saw you play at Lafayette in London, you were joined by a great double bass player called Caimin Gilmore…. 

Bernard Butler: I met him when I was doing the Jessie [Buckley] record. We went to Ireland to do The Late Late Show  and I was put in touch with some Irish musicians – I only met him two hours before the show… We did a quick rehearsal, did the show, and went out and had a few beers… He did some other shows with me around that time – he’s an amazing musician.

I did a Bert Jansch tribute show last year at the Royal Festival Hall, and I got Caimin over to play a couple of songs with me – it was kind of testing the water, and I really enjoyed it.

Caimin Gilmore and Bernard Butler at Lafayette, London: Nov 2 2024. Picture by Sean Hannam

‘Something that thrills me about my shows, and that I hope people pick up on, is that I’m not running a laptop or playing the songs exactly as they are on the record. A lot of it is improvisation on the spot’

It’s interesting that you mentioned Bert Jansch, because when Caimin played with you, it reminded me of John Martyn and Danny Thompson, or Pentangle… That improvised, folk-jazz thing…

Bernard Butler: A lot of my shows are improvised, but the reason I wanted Caimin up there was to have another person who could also improvise – he could go against me, and I could spar with him. Something that thrills me about my shows, and that I hope people pick up on, is that I’m not running a laptop or playing the songs exactly as they are on the record. A lot of it is improvisation on the spot.

You have to know your shit to do that in-front of people, night after night. It’s a really thrilling part of this episode in my career – every solo I ever do is improv.

Photograph by Bella Keery

 

With Caimin, everyone always talks about Danny Thompson… It’s a fair call, but he’s also very different to that, and he’s very good as using his instrument to get almost special effects – what he does with a bow is amazing.

With Caimin, there’s a bit of an opening… a beginning of where I go next… I made a lot of this record [Good Grief] on my own – almost all the instruments… It always ends up like that – not by my choice… I just start writing something and recording it, and if it sounds good, I just keep it, but my dream is to be in a room with people. I don’t really want to record on my own – it’s a very painstaking process and very long-winded. I would love to be in a room, just standing with some people, and hear the music come alive. I want to take a bit of the weight off my shoulders. With the next stage of what I do, I really want a bit of help… (laughs). I feel like I’ve earned it.

You are known as a producer, as well as a guitarist and singer-songwriter. Would you like to work with a producer?

Bernard Butler: I’d love it. People probably don’t expect me to say that, but I would. I’ve produced many records for people and myself – I’ve done it and I’ve learnt all those skills. I don’t need to prove anything, but I’ve love to sit with somebody else and let go of the reins. I don’t know if that will happen next time… maybe I’ll try something. I’ve no idea how that would come about… Part of that is the cost – everything in my business has got to be economical now. It’s so hard to earn a living… Having Caimin is the first step…

Earlier this year, you released an EP on digital and vinyl – Live At The Green Note, which featured six songs from Good Grief

Bernard Butler: I wanted something out in time for the tour, so people could go to a show and bring something home. For most artists, merch is their petrol home or their Travelodge, or it pays their bills, and, because of streaming, I feel if people go to a show they enjoy, they want to take a souvenir home…. I’ve got a feeling that a lot people who buy my records don’t have a record player, but they’re still beautiful things to have – we’ve gone to a lot of effort, as we always have done, to create good artwork.

When you leave a show, hopefully feeling good, then you might want to take something home to remind you of it. Before streaming, you could go home and put the record on the next morning, because you wanted to hear it again, but now you don’t have that thing to hold in your hand… Also, because of the way I’ve been playing the songs from Good Grief all year, I thought it was nice to have a version of that… a little record.

I like the live version of Clean, which has a snatch of you singing Temptation by New Order… 

Bernard Butler: Whenever I do that live, no one ever mentions it! I’m just doing it for me and you, Sean.

Is Temptation a favourite song of yours?

Bernard Butler: Of course. I’m a huge New Order fan and I always have been. My brother used to be a king bootlegger in the ’80s. He used to go to New Order shows with a Walkman under his raincoat, record everything and bring it home. New Order, The Smiths, The Cure… acts from that era. That’s pretty much how I learnt to play guitar.

‘I buy a few records every year – a handful of things that I like and I know I’m going to return to’

Temptation is an odd song… It’s one of the best New Order songs, but, for me, it’s never had a definitive recording. They did two versions in 1982, which are the best ones, but they’re really dirty and not technically up to scratch. It was redone for Substance in 1986, but I don’t like that version at all.

You mentioned buying vinyl earlier… Do you buy a lot of records? Are you a crate digger?

Bernard Butler: I don’t go out every weekend, like I would’ve done, but I buy a few every year – a handful of things that I like and I know I’m going to return to.

So, what new vinyl albums have you bought this year?

Bernard Butler: I’ve bought the Bill Ryder-Jones record, which I really love, Beth Gibbons, and the Weller album, which was good – things that are beautifully made and that I know I want to find next year, not lose in the cocoon of streaming. I can just pick them up again…

Have you got a favourite album of 2024?

Bernard Butler: Probably Bill Ryder-Jones… I’ve been listening to him for a long time, but haven’t always thought it completely hits the mark, but he’s one of those people who’s giving you nods all the time that he’s a talented fucker. With this record, I felt it just hits it, over and over again. I’m blown away by it – it’s really beautiful and I love his approach to vocals and the playfulness of the instrumentation.

Butler, Blake and Grant: (left to right: Norman Blake, Bernard Butler and James Grant)

 

So, in March next year, you’re releasing an album by Butler, Blake and Grant – your project with Scottish singer-songwriters Norman Blake and James Grant, which started off with you playing some shows together. How did that collaboration come about?

Bernard Butler: Two or three years ago, Norman and James were going to do a Celtic Connections show, and a friend of mine suggested that I should do it with them. I knew Norman from years back, but I didn’t know James at all. It was a deliberate thing to put three songwriters together and do a songwriters circle thing to experiment…

We did it once, it was a good laugh and really easy – we just got up there and joined in with each other, and it went down really well. So we did another, and then we ended up doing a tour and it’s snowballed.  All the time we were just playing the songs that we had already, but it was James’s idea to do some writing. I was a bit reticent because it worked with us just doing it for a bit of a laugh, but then we did it… We went up to Norman’s to hang out for a couple of days and see what would happen. It really worked – there was no set way of doing it – we just sat around in armchairs playing, and James said, ‘I’ve got this tune…’ and he started playing a song, and we joined in and started working it out together.

‘I always write for a purpose – I never have songs stockpiled, but I keep notes and ideas for lyrics’

I asked Norman if he had any recording gear and he did, so we got out some mics and set them up in Norman’s living room we had no headphones or isolation. There was no studio set up – just three microphones plugged into a computer. We said we would record everything we did – just press record and leave it… We did a song by James and one of Norman’s, then I wrote something really quickly, overnight (laughs). 

James Grant, Norman Blake and Bernard Butler

The two of them are super-talented James has got loads of songs, and Norman has little bits here and there, and he has to pull them together, but I always write for a purpose – I never have songs stockpiled, but I keep notes and ideas for lyrics. I write down thoughts and things people say or things that I hear, so when I want to write, I have a resource to go to. I don’t ever sit and finish a song, type it out and leave it for weeks…

So, from the first session, we each came up with a song, and we recorded them just us singing and playing guitars. I took the recordings back to London and had a little fiddle with them and added a few things – a bit of percussion, or whatever, and said, ‘Guys – this is good, it’s a record…’ So we did another couple of sessions and did a song each and that’s how the album’s come about. It was a real joy.

How is it being the only English guy in the band? It’s like a twist on the old joke: an Englishman, a Scotsman and a Scotsman walk into a bar… 

Bernard Butler: It’s terrifying – especially in Scotland. They go into super-Scots mode, where the accents and the in-jokes get thicker, and I have to admit that I’m the idiot Englishman and just have to be obvious about it. It’s a lot of fun and it’s really helped with my confidence, and it gave me an opportunity to get going again.

When I arrived to do the first show, James and Norman thought I was just going to play guitar, which is quite funny looking back at it – I assumed they thought I was coming to sing as well, so I rocked up with some songs and they were like, ‘OK,’ and they didn’t say anything about it… It wasn’t until months afterwards that they admitted it. I think it’s better for it – I hope everyone thinks that… We do a really good version of ‘Yes’ [by McAlmont and Butler] – I really like playing it with them because they get stuck into the harmonies.

Are you making plans for another solo album?

Bernard Butler: Yeah – I’m thinking about when I’m going to do it and start putting it together, but I haven’t written anything yet. I’ve got lots of things knocking around, but I want to use next year to focus on Butler, Blake and Grant, and then I’m going to start getting my own record together for the year after, because I don’t want to lose momentum. There will be lots of solo shows next year too – I’m going to keep touring.

Good Grief is out now on 355 Recordings.

www.bernardbutler.com

The debut album by Butler, Blake and Grant will be released in March 2025 (355 Recordings).

‘Weirdly, Cinerama feels like my new band, but it’s been 25 years….’

 

David Gedge

 

When it comes to break-up albums, Va Va Voom, the debut record by Cinerama, which came out in 1998, is up there with the best of them. 

Inspired by the ’60s movie soundtracks of John Barry and Ennio Morricone, as well as Burt Bacharach, Serge Gainsbourg and ABBA,  it’s full of bittersweet indie-pop songs – a filmic, tragicomic masterpiece, with droll lyrics, lush strings, theatrical piano, organ, ’70s wah-wah guitar, and even a harpsichord.  

Cinerama were originally a duo consisting of David Gedge, frontman with The Wedding Present, and Sally Murrell, his then partner. 

The group, which was Gedge’s first musical project outside of The Wedding Present, who, at that time in their career, had released five albums of indie-rock, went on to make two more long-players: Disco Volante and Torino.

Now, more than 25 years after Va Va Voom’s release, Gedge has decided to re-record the album with a full band and a string quartet – the new version is called Va Va Voom 25 – and it’s out this month.

The deluxe edition consists of two coloured vinyl LPs and two CDs containing both a full studio re-recording of the original album, together with a live recording of the album from August 2023, which can also be viewed on an accompanying DVD.

A Double CD and DVD set contains both these recordings, along with the aforementioned DVD, while a picture disc includes the studio re-recording – all the versions feature new artwork.

In an exclusive interview, Gedge, who lives in Brighton, tells Say It With Garage Flowers why he’s revisited Va Va Voom, shares his love of Bond film soundtracks, and reflects on a busy 2024.

Q&A 

Let’s talk about the new, re-recorded version of Cinerama’s Va Va Voom – the original album came out more than 25 years ago…

David Gedge: Weirdly, it feels like my new band (laughs), and the fact that it’s been 25 years has suddenly crept up on me … I’ve got no sense of time for it…

Cinerama is a weird thing, because I did it as my main band from 1997 to 2005, I think it was… and since then I’ve sporadically gone back to it – we re-recorded another album a few years ago, and now we’ve done this one… We only play if people specifically invite us, but we always play at my festival in Brighton… It’s nice in a way – I go back to it every now and again… It’s a different thing to do.

So, you played the album live, with a band, at your festival, At The Edge Of The Sea, in Brighton, last year, and you were struck by how more dynamic it sounded with a full group playing it, so that’s what led you to rerecord it…

DG: Exactly – I started working on the [original] idea in 1997. It was at that time when computers were getting a bit cheaper and more sophisticated, and there were samplers…

In The Wedding Present, I think we’d started using samplers two or three years before, but they only allowed a few seconds of memory because it was so expensive… I got myself an 8-track recorder, a mixing desk, a sampler and some sequencing software for my computer, so straightaway everything became very accessible, and I was doing stuff at home that I couldn’t imagine I could do before, like drum loops and writing string parts.

I’m not a keyboard player, but I could slowly write parts, drop them in and change them on the computer. I did demos at home and then I went in the studio and used sessions musicians – it wasn’t a band, it was me going in with some ideas, and it was very much a studio album.

‘Last year was the 25th anniversary of Va Va Voom – we played it live and I was just struck by how different it sounded played by a band’

I worked with a producer at the time, and he said: ‘I know a drummer or a bass player who could do that…’ It was meticulous. None of the songs were ever played by a band in a room – it was kind of piecemeal. I formed a band after that.

So, last year was the 25th anniversary of Va Va Voom – we played it live and I was just struck by how different it sounded played by a band. I guess that’s obvious, really – you’ve got people working off each other, and it’s more energetic because you’re not in the controlled environment of the studio – you’re playing on stage and it’s more exuberant and exciting…

As we’d been rehearsing it, I felt that we should go and record it quickly, so when we finished the festival, I booked a studio in Brighton and recorded it with the band. I kind of left it at that for a while, but then I went back later and organised a string quartet, a keyboard player, and a flute player… There were some overdubs, but, at the end of the day, it was a band playing together, which was a big difference.

I think the re-recorded version is more dramatic and has a fuller sound… It’s twangier too…

DG: It’s definitely more guitary – I replaced some of the parts that were originally on keyboards with guitar, and the fuller sound might be because of the strings…

When I did the original Va Va Voom, I didn’t know anything about strings – I was just playing them on the keyboard. I had ‘low’ strings and ‘high’ strings – I didn’t know anything about orchestration, but, over the years, I’ve taught myself how to do it a bit more.

I still don’t know much about music theory, but at least I know about a quartet. So, on the new version I rearranged those parts for cello, viola and two violins. It makes the strings a bit bigger… On the original, we used some samples of string players, but on the new record it’s just the band plus the string quartet.

‘I love John Barry and I’ve always loved Bond films, although they are a bit dated now. The music is so amazing’

Cinerama saw you embracing the music of film soundtrack composers like John Barry and Ennio Morricone. Have you always been into that kind of stuff?

DG: Absolutely – I love John Barry and I’ve always loved Bond films, although they are a bit dated now. The music is so amazing – I’ve got the soundtrack LPs. I was playing You Only Live Twice the other day – the whole album is amazing, with strings, brass and twangy guitar.

You put together an album of Bond song cover versions a few years ago – it was called Not From Where I’m Standing and featured current and former members of Cinerama and The Wedding Present. Have you got a favourite Bond song?

DG: No – there are so many of them… On that record, The Wedding Present did You Only Live Twice, which I’ve always liked, Cinerama did Diamonds Are Forever, and I did We Have All The Time In The World from On Her Majesty’s Secret Service. John Barry had such a way with melody – haunting, romantic strings, punchy brass, guitar… It’s fantastic.

I’ve got a lot of Ennio Morricone stuff on my iTunes or whatever and when it comes on, you just think: ‘Oh, wow – what’s this?’ There are twangy guitars but also choirs and Mariachi brass sounds… I loved all that as a kid – I always had it at the back of my mind – but, obviously, The Wedding Present was nothing like that – it was indie-guitar rock along the lines of The Velvet Underground or whatever…

Cinerama was born when we had some time off from The Wedding Present, and I thought, ‘Ahh, I should do this…’ We were in a rehearsal room in Yorkshire, and the owner took me into the studio there and showed me Cakewalk, which was sequencing software, and it changed my life.

In 15 minutes, he showed me how you could play a piano sound, copy and paste it, and change the tempo…I was like, ‘Wow – this is amazing,’ and that launched me into thinking, ‘I could do that….’

It wasn’t just John Barry and Ennio Morricone… there were other influences, like ‘60s pop and ABBA even.

 

I think Va Va Voom is one of the greatest break-up albums ever, and I love the droll lyrics… It’s a tragicomic record… Can you remember writing the songs and when you went back to play them live and rerecord them, did any memories come back to haunt you?

DG: Yeah – all the time. That happens with The Wedding Present as well – my songs are very personal – but it depends on the songs… Sometimes, they’re totally autobiographical and sometimes they’re a little bit autobiographical, but I’ve made it into a story, or I imagine myself in a situation and what I would do in it. It’s like reading a little diary…

The songs Comedienne reminds me of The Cure’s In-between Days, and You Turn Me On has a jangly New Order feel…

DG: Yeah – a couple of the more guitary ones are like indie-pop, but Hard, Fast and Beautiful is meant to sound like a film soundtrack.

It has very theatrical piano on it…

DG: Yes.

The arrangement on Dance, Girl, Dance, is very ABBAesque…

DG: I always thought that was a bit of an ABBA tribute in a way. Weirdly, when were we doing the original Va Va Voom , the bass player, Anthony Coote, who the producer suggested, was actually in Bjorn Again!

So, I said to him, ‘Could you do a bassline that’s like ABBA, and he said, ‘Give me the bass!’ Apparently that double octave funky disco sound is hard to play – I’ve had bass players since who’ve said: ‘Oh, my God – I’m getting cramp!’

‘My songs are very personal – it’s like reading a little diary’

David Gedge at Walthamstow Rock ‘n’ Roll Book Club in 2022 – picture by Simon Cardwell

Dance, Girl, Dance also features the phrase ‘freshly shaven legs’, which is great to hear in a pop song…

DG: I don’t like to hide behind metaphors that much – I like to make it more relatable…

Ears is like a dark version of Serge Gainsbourg’s Je t’aime… moi non plus ….

DG: Yeah – he was a big influence on Cinerama…

Hate is a song directed at someone you wish you’d never met, but musically it’s sweet, poppy and melodic. I like the juxtaposition – it’s a sugar-coated, poison pill…

DG: Yes – it’s a bit extreme that one, isn’t it? A dark lyric, but quite poppy… I remember when I was putting the songs together for the first version of the album, the first producer I was going to work with focused on that song. He said it was a brilliant song and that he’d like to do this with it, etc, etc… I didn’t use him in the end… It’s quite different for me and it’s quite an odd song…

Barefoot In The Park is named after the 1967 romcom starring Robert Redford and Jane Fonda – the film features in the lyric too. I like the funky wah-wah guitar and lush strings on that track…

DG: That’s two of my loves – ‘60s or ‘70s cinematography and wah-wah…. I wouldn’t like to force the rest of The Wedding Present down that road, so with Cinerama, I was like a kid in a sweetshop – ‘Oh, let’s do a bit of wah-wah guitar – I love that sound! [He does an impression of a wah-wah guitar.] So, you’ve got that on one track, but on another track there’s a harpsichord (laughs).

David Gedge in Palm Springs – picture by Jessica McMillan

‘Two of my loves are ‘60s or ‘70s cinematography and wah-wah…. I wouldn’t like to force the rest of The Wedding Present down that road…’

Would you like to re-record any other Cinerama songs or records?

DG: No – not really, because two of the other albums and the singles and sessions were all done by a band. It would be interesting to redo them, but I don’t think I’d really add anything, whereas I felt like this one was worth doing. It’s quite a big commitment to re-record an album – it’s time, money and organisation… I don’t think I’d do it for another album, but who knows? Never say never..

Never say never again…

DG: (Laughs).

How’s 2024 been for you?

DG: It’s been very busy – we did some concerts for the 30th anniversary of Watusi [Wedding Present album]…

And it was the 35th anniversary of your album Bizarro too…

DG: Yeah – we did some shows for that in October. I didn’t really plan it – we did a European tour and the promoter asked if we fancied doing Bizarro. So, I said, ‘Why not?’ and I really enjoyed it, so we did some British concerts as well.

You’re celebrating a lot of anniversaries, which is apt for a band called The Wedding Present…

DG: Yeah (laughs) – we’ve had two this year…

You’re playing some shows in North America next year too…

DG: Yeah – the North American agent said, ‘We want Bizarro as well…’, so we’re doing it there in May and June. I said it’s been a busy year, but I’m always busy… I’m my own worst enemy in a way because I’ve got two bands and a festival, and my ongoing autobiography that I’m doing – it’s called Tales From The Wedding Present  and it’s in comic book form. I’ve done two volumes of it, but the person who draws it has just retired and he keeps saying, ‘Send me more stories…’ but I have to tell him I’m busy… I’ve had Va Va Voom to re-record, and I had to tour Bizarro... It’s about finding the time, really… We’ve also been writing new songs – we’ve got six of them now…

‘I’m always busy… I’m my own worst enemy, because I’ve got two bands and a festival, and my ongoing autobiography’

David Gedge – picture by Jamie MacMillan

As we’ve been talking about Cinemara and film soundtracks, who would you like to play you in The Wedding Present biopic?

DG: (Laughs) Er, I used to say Colin Firth – a lot of people used to say I looked like him, but I guess he’s a bit old now… I don’t know – I’m not really up on young, dashing actors…

Cinerama’s Va Va Voom 25 is released on December 13 and is available in three formats: 

  • Double Vinyl LP + Double CD + DVD
  • Double CD + DVD
  • 12” Picture Disc

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